I understand perfectly well that the reason we are worried about the plight of the 21 deported individuals is probably because they have been deported, precisely because they were not likey to be tortured.
At present, our main concern pertains to people who may be tortured or killed and who are to be deported. When I read the Supreme Court decision, it is precisely because of the very significant consequences, such as imprisonment for an indefinite period of time, that it is asking for requirements that closely resemble criminal law requirements. I would imagine that if these individuals prefer the comfort of our prisons rather than returning to their country of origin, it is not because they would be so poorly off there, it is because they could be imprisoned there. That is what I am chiefly concerned about.
To repeat an expression I hear often, it is true that the deportation order is a three-walled prison. If I continue on with this comparison, there are circumstances where the prison has three walls and a cliff on the fourth side. It's for these cases that we must, before we deport people, ensure that we have something more than a mere deportation order.
I do not want to get into whether or not we should, in cases where we're dealing with people who really may be killed if they are deported, call for a much more demanding procedure or more solid evidence than in cases where there is merely a deportation order, because other issues concern me. However, I do think that this is a topic that we could explore. Moreover, it seems to me that the criteria should be increasingly stringent if the detention continues for several years.
On another issue, no one has talked about appeals. Are you satisfied with the fact that this appeal, which is purely administrative, is perhaps accessible and acceptable in cases where we are dealing with purely administrative decisions that do not involve the loss of liberty? Are you satisfied with this type of appeal?
Personally, I am not aware of any appeal requirements that are so stringent. If I were the person targeted, I would say that this type of appeal may be good for furthering justice, but it wouldn't reassure me a great deal to know that the person who decides whether or not I'm to remain in prison indefinitely is also the same individual who will be drafting my notice of appeal for submission to the appeal court judge.
Do you have any comments to make with respect to the appeal process?